immitigable

Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

adj. That cannot be mitigated: immitigable circumstances.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

adj. That cannot be mitigated

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English

adj. Not capable of being mitigated, softened, or appeased.

from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

Not mitigable; incapable of being mitigated or appeased.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

im- +‎ mitigable

Examples

Calista, I swear to thee, by the spotlessness of thy own soul, by the brilliancy of thy immitigable eyes, by everything pure and chaste in heaven and in thy own heart, that I will never cease from following thee!

Her main fault was a brooding, eternal, immitigable suspicion of all men, things, creeds, and parties; this suspicion was a mist before her eyes, a false guide in her path, wherever she looked, wherever she turned.

It was, indeed, Rima returned to tell me that I that loved her had been more cruel to her than her cruellest enemies; for they had but tortured and destroyed her body with fire, while I had cast this shadow on her soul — this sorrow transcending all sorrows, darker than death, immitigable, eternal.

His wife was the daughter of a laundress, in whose house he had lodged thirty years ago, when new to London but already long-acquainted with hunger; they lived in complete harmony, but Mrs Hinks, who was four years the elder, still spoke the laundress tongue, unmitigated and immitigable.

Now, in the stillness, is heard the long, melancholy note of a bird, complaining above of some wrong or sorrow that man, or her own kind, or the immitigable doom of mortal affairs, has inflicted upon her, the complaining, but unresisting sufferer.